Back Alley Cop

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Back Alley Cop Page 1

by Temple Madison




  Back Alley Cop

  Temple Madison

  Published: 2016

  ISBN: 978-1-62210-311-9

  Published by Liquid Silver Books. Copyright © 2016, Temple Madison.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the author.

  This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents and dialogues in this book are of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is completely coincidental.

  Manufactured in the USA

  Email [email protected] with questions, or inquiries about Liquid Silver Books.

  Blurb

  Eddie Scarlett, one of NYC finest cops, is a tarnished hero. According to the scum on the street Eddie is handsome, hot, and dangerous, but he has a heart as black as death. He’s called a back alley cop because he does undercover work for the NYPD, making him familiar with every back alley in the city. And when a crime spree breaks out, he meets what he thinks is a whore with beautiful blue eyes. During their first encounter, they slam together like two taxis on Broadway. And then Eddie has to go undercover. It’s the kind of case that will test the resolve of a tough back alley cop like Eddie Scarlett, forcing him to forget his blue-eyed man-whore, and even his identity to melt into the city’s back alleys and capture a master killer who’s wielding a cold blade with a deadly side effect—murder.

  Prologue

  CLICK, click, click— The echoing sound haunted the dark city streets like a spine-tingling nightmare. Each lonely, isolated step continued to crunch along the asphalt until at last a frightened, solitary woman in stiletto heels emerged from a leaning shaft of cold darkness. She rushed swiftly along, darting between parked cars, and then across a rain-washed street. In her haste she stumbled over a crumbling curb that viciously ripped at her pantyhose. With a muffled curse she quickly gained her balance and continued running and staggering, the eerie silence of the late hour causing her to cast an anxious eye behind her. Sheer, black terror gripped her when the massive shadows took the heart-stopping shape of a man's profile. She could hear the far-off ghostly sound of his shoes as they scraped along the hard surface.

  She spun around, hurrying away.

  Her heart thrashed in her chest.

  The shadow man stayed with her, moving when she moved, stopping when she stopped. She shivered when she felt the fog’s misty kiss upon her cheeks, an icy chill on the nape of her neck, and pulled her trench coat closer around her. One by one the lights of the restaurants blinked out, and the smell of burned coffee grounds, mixed with rotting garbage, made her stomach heave.

  She stopped.

  She couldn’t go any farther.

  Her breathing was heavy and labored as she leaned her head against a cool, wet lamppost. Finally opening her eyes, she found herself looking down into a shallow pool of blood, but quickly realized it was the reflection of the red, garish neon lights on rushing rainwater. She looked up when the halogen light above her sputtered to a whisper, leaving her standing in total darkness. Dread slowly climbed up her spine like a coiling snake as she looked around for somewhere to run. Finally, she hurried across the vacant street into the lighted park, hoping to find someone to help her. The moment she got past the wide arched opening she stopped, looked around, and even though it looked as if she was alone—she felt a presence close by.

  He was behind her.

  She could hear him breathing.

  She could hear the rustling of his clothes.

  She could hear the crunch of dirt beneath his shoes as he moved closer—and closer.

  Finally forcing herself out of her frozen state, she turned and saw her stalker. Her eyes widened in surprise at what looked like a hideous mask that loomed dark and ugly before her. As she turned to run, her scream came swelling into the night, but before she could get away, she was suddenly grabbed from behind. She felt a hand on her mouth, muffling the gurgling sounds of torment.

  The man wrestled her into a dark corner behind a large trash bin and threw her to the ground. Fear surged through her as the cold glitter of a large steel blade danced threateningly before her eyes. Beyond it she could see the madness gleaming in his eyes, and the next thing she knew the cold blade sliced across her throat. She had just enough life inside her to reach up and clutch one side of his mask and tear it away—before everything slowly faded into darkness.

  Chapter 1

  THE man grinned with evil pleasure when he saw the woman’s life slowly ebb away. He noticed that half of his mask was being held in her death-like grip. He tried to pry it loose until he was suddenly jarred by the sound of sirens piercing the air like a tiny echo in the distance. Forgetting the mask, he immediately backed away from the dead body, stumbling through rocks and debris as he ran toward the entrance to escape, only to find a group of cop cars with whirling red and blue lights come to a screeching halt at the curb. He turned, and with a dive, he lunged into a thick bush, listening as the thudding sound of opening and closing doors filled the night. With his nerves jumping, he saw the black-clad bastards spilling out of the vehicles, their guns drawn, a stone-hard resolve geared up to jump anything that moved.

  He stayed silent, his breath quiet, his nerves screaming.

  *

  As tall, dark, and deadly, I’ve-Seen-It-All Eddie Scarlett made his way through the uniforms he slipped his gloves out and prepared himself for the job he had to do. His main job with the precinct was that of a Back Alley Cop—a code name for going undercover. They had code names for almost everything these days, but a serial killer was still a serial killer, and that’s what they had on their hands now—a dirty freakin’ serial killer.

  His gaze moved along the ground at the woman whose body was bloody and mutilated. Eddie was unmoved. In his earlier years he would have been crying—literally. His hands would be covering his face, tears creeping through his fingers as he looked down at the horrible sight. But not now. Through the years his heart had turned to stone. In fact, Eddie Scarlett had been an undercover cop at NYPD so long, and had seen so much, he felt dead inside.

  In his dark trench coat, he blended with the night, slithering in and out of close quarters like the most venomous of snakes. He carried a Glock close to his heart, and walked strong, not nervous like some did, always looking over their shoulders for something suspicious. His presence on the street spelled danger to all the street punks, dealers, and gangs in the area. Even when he was off duty his radar was up, and along with the uniformed patrol, he did his best to keep the streets safe. But every now and again a killing of this magnitude would happen, and they would call him in to do a down and dirty examination of the crime scene by accumulating any kind of physical evidence he could find. He spent his time digging out the residue from beneath the victim’s fingernails, taking a mold of the killer’s handprints, as well as estimating his height and weight by the imprints of body parts he might have left in the mud. If he was very lucky he would find strands of the killer’s hair in the victim’s hand, giving them color, length, and DNA, but in this case he found her hand wrapped tightly around a torn mask. All this added together would give them a starting point in identifying the suspect.

  Now, his job finally done, he rose to his feet, took one last look at the victim, and knew he was lying to himself. He did feel something, but it wasn’t sadness, grief, distress, or regret as one might suspect, but anger, rage, fury, and a deep desire to find the rat who did this and tear him limb from limb. To calm himself, he took a few deep breaths, wiped his hand along his jawline that was cover
ed with a five o’clock shadow, and made his way through the uniforms for the OIC. When he found him, he told him what he’d uncovered, helped the others canvass the area one last time for anything missed or unseen, and then secured the crime scene. When the forensics unit finally arrived, he gave them what he had, and then conducted a grand tour that was every bit as professional as the tour guide at Kennedy Center.

  With his job done, Eddie couldn’t get away fast enough.

  He quickly slammed into his car, turned the ignition on, and felt the welcome purr of the engine. With a lead foot he revved it up over and over, his anger showing. The moment he got the car in motion he maneuvered it out of the parking spot, and gradually gained speed until he felt the wind slapping at his face from the open window. He longed for a wind that was clean and crisp for once, but as usual he was hit in the face by the sickening odor of blood that quickly got lost among other disgusting odors. Drugs, alcohol, immorality, rape, corruption, muggings, perversion—all a colorless, ghostly, and intoxicating danger that drifted through the city streets like an invisible giant. He looked from left to right, and even behind him, an eye out not only for other traffic, but undesirables.

  The ugly criminal types.

  The guilty ones.

  The ones, who, if they even moved, he’d be down on them in a New York minute.

  So, with sharp eyes that missed nothing, and a dark trench coat covering his back, he drove along the busted up streets of this concrete jungle scouring every trash bin, alleyway, and manhole until he crawled into his own bed to finally sleep—when he was able to sleep.

  Once he got back to the precinct, he learned that they had already nabbed a suspect, so he had just enough time to drink a cup of cold coffee in lieu of a stiff whiskey sour, wolf down a cold sandwich in lieu of a hot meal at the diner, and knock back several swigs of water, still trying to get the stinking taste of the street out of his mouth.

  Finally, he crushed the disposable cup in his hand like it was the neck of public enemy number one, and threw it into the wastebasket. Now it begins. He walked toward the dull, drab, scratched-up door with the word Interrogation Room stretched across the top panel like it was an invitation to Hell.

  Oh, joy.

  The moment Eddie opened the door, he was hit in the face by cigarette smoke mixed with sweat. The room had personality. Every sicko perp that had ever been in there left some kind of odor to float around in the air. It was the only room in the precinct that could, along with Baskin-Robbins, boast of over thirty-nine flavors—or was it thirty-one? Thirty-five? Hell, did it matter? No chocolate or strawberry here, only the smell of tension, hate, and fear, along with the tiniest stench that told him that this room had been used for something other than interrogation.

  Hundreds of angry, killing, grappling hands had fisted and splayed on that rickety, old interrogation table that looked as if it had been found in a dumpster somewhere. Rage that could almost be tasted hung in the air, giving the room a one-of-a-kind persona that was so real it could almost stand up and fight back.

  He was deep in these ugly thoughts when suddenly he stopped short.

  Sitting there at the badly scratched up table wasn’t the blood-covered, black-eyed monster he’d expected, but an innocent looking, blond-haired baby.

  Not baby in the sense that he was young, but baby like in, oh, baby!

  Eddie’s years of experience told him that this wasn’t the freak they were after. This was a hot little number that had been at the wrong place at the wrong time. Eddie’s gaze lowered, beginning at his leather-clad feet and red flashy socks, and traveled up along his muscled frame to a net muscle shirt. Eddie almost laughed out loud when he noticed his red shirt matched his red socks. While the guy sat there all muscled and tattooed, Eddie wondered what he did for a living.

  A model, an actor, or something much worse—a street walker.

  He couldn’t help but wonder what kind of smell would linger after he left the room. Maybe a bit of the spicy cologne he could smell wafting off him from where he stood. Too bad it would be eaten up by the nastier scents.

  Approaching the suspect, he looked down at the clipboard he was carrying. “Adam? Adam Dunbar? Is that you?”

  “Yeah, it’s me.”

  With his answer Eddie pulled up a chair, scraping the floor as he swung it backward and straddled it. When the boy looked up at him, Eddie had to hold his breath to keep from gasping. He had the bluest, the most beautiful, the most innocent, the most—

  “I didn’t do it,” Adam said, his smooth voice breaking the silence in the room.

  “Do what?”

  “You know what…” He hesitated when he peered at Eddie. “You look familiar. Do I know you?”

  “The name is Eddie Scarlett.”

  “Oh, my God, you’re Eddie Scarlett? The Eddie Scarlett I’ve heard so much about?”

  “I don’t know what the hell you’re talking about. I’m not the anything. I’m just a New York city cop doin’ his job.”

  “Nah, you’re not just any old cop. You’re the one they call Demon, right?”

  “They do if they want to get their heads bashed in.”

  “You think I don’t know who Eddie Scarlett really is? Everyone knows Eddie Scarlett and his reputation. I’ve heard that you’ve got a heart as black as death, and they call you a back alley cop, but I don’t know why. Is it because you know every back alley in the city?”

  “Something like that.”

  “Hey, is it true that once you even pulled a gun on a guy you were having sex with because he wouldn’t do what you wanted?”

  “That’s a lie! The slob wanted to ruin my reputation.”

  “Are you kidding? I’d say your reputation is already in the toilet, Demon.”

  “If it is, it’s right there with yours and everybody else’s. Now how about we…”

  “You patrol the streets nightly,” Adam said softly, looking closely at Eddie, “your impressive frame always dressed in black. Cop black. Always swaggering to the music of the streets. I’ve heard all about your hot little episodes in those back alleys. For a favor, of course. I have to admit that I never expected to see you when I was brought in, but here you are with your wolfish smile looking at me as if I was your next meal. You’re a predator, Demon, a legend. You draw your sex partners in the same way. Your voice, your touch, your desire to consume them. They become an ember within your fire. They become a possession—branded by the Demon.”

  “Now you listen to me, you little twerp…”

  “Okay, okay. I know when to put a plug in it. So…you gonna give me a chance to tell you what I saw, or is this some kind of railroad job?”

  “You got something to say, I’m all ears, but I don’t want to hear anything else about what goes on in the streets.”

  “Okay…well…it goes like this. I was goin’ out to meet a friend at a bar on the other side of the park, and decided to cut through to save myself some steps. I was just approaching the front entrance when I heard something, and went over to investigate. The next thing I knew some stupid cop grabbed me, and pushed me up against one of them fuckin’ chain link fences and put some kind of steel bracelets on me. I tried to tell ’em they had the wrong guy, but would the officer listen to me? Hell no. While he had me up against the fence the real killer got away.”

  “You mean he was in the immediate area?”

  “Of course he was. I saw him as clear as I see you. They would’ve seen him too if they weren’t so…”

  While he was talking, Eddie continued his interested inspection of the guy’s body that included a snake tattoo that wound up his muscled arm. “I don’t see any blood. Did you wear something over your clothes when you killed her?”

  “Killed her? Haven’t you been listening to me? I didn’t fuckin’ kill the bitch, I was just passing by, for God’s sake. She was already dead before I showed up.”

  “All right. Don’t get your panties in a twist. I don�
��t think you did it. I’m just conducting an investigation. It’s my job, you know.”

  “Sounds to me like you’re tryin’ to railroad me…Demon.”

  “All right now, let’s get this straight. My name is Eddie. Did you get that? Eddie Scarlett. Demon is the name the dirt on the street gave me.”

  “Sounds like you enjoy saying your own name. I’ve heard about people like you. Narcissistic as hell. You got a problem…Demon.”

  “No, you’ve got the problem, which is why you were apprehended and brought in here. Like I said before, Demon is only a street name.” He looked around. “Are we on the street?”

  “I’m gonna be in about two seconds.” Adam jumped up.

  “Where the hell do you think you’re goin’?”

  “You can’t keep me here. You said yourself that I didn’t do it, so arrest me or let me go.”

  “Sorry, but I’ve got to get some information from you first.”

  “Like what?”

  “Like your name, your job, where you live, how old you are.” He indicated to the chair. “Have a seat.”

  “I told you my name.” Adam sat down. “And why the hell does it matter where I live if I’m not the one they’re lookin’ for?”

  “Oh, I don’t know. I might want to send you a birthday card.”

  “You’re a smartass, you know that?”

  “Takes one to know one.”

  Adam looked at Eddie as if he were crazy. “I’ve been out of elementary school for years. I guess you didn’t make it, huh?”

  “Naw, they took me out of elementary school and made a cop out of me. Let me give you a little advice, kid. Drop the attitude, and you’ll make this a lot more pleasant for the both of us.”

  “What you call attitude I call personality.”

  “With a personality like that you’ll never win friends and influence people. Just answer the freakin’ questions so we can go and stop torturing each other. Keep in mind we might want to call you back in for a lineup.”

 

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